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Gamastura reports on EA's record-breaking revenue for the 2006 Christmas season. The company reported $1.281 billion in their revenue stream, fueled by the Sims, Madden, and Need for Speed franchises. The company's financials talk was also a surprise opportunity to pledge support for Nintendo consoles. Electronic Arts aims to be 'the #2 publisher' for the Nintendo DS and the Wii. The company has 15 products already in the pipe for the two platforms, with a DS version of both Spore and The Sims slated for release this year. This move, CEO Larry Probst was quick to point out, is not at the expense of the other systems. Their acquisition of the Headgate studio has given them additional resources, and they are choosing to 'aggressively' pursue the marketplace.

Translation: We bet our money on the wrong horse, and now we're going to make up for it.

Is that the translation to this?:

This move, CEO Larry Probst was quick to point out, is not at the expense of the other systems. Their acquisition of the Headgate studio has given them additional resources, and they are choosing to 'aggressively' pursue the marketplace.

Doesn't sound like they thought they bet on the wrong horse so much as they see an additional business opportunity that wasn't there in the Gamecube days. All this talk about "winners" and "losers" in the console "war" is not as relevant as many people might think to companies like EA.

As far as EA is concerned, they'd like see everyone sell lots and lots of consoles and they'd like to cash in on all of those sales, not just the sales of a "winner." The company that sells the most consoles is irrelevant to them as long as all the consoles sell well. Nintendo is doing very well, but no better than the 360 according to December's numbers. There's some debate over which console actually won in that month, but EA doesn't give a rat's ass. All it cares is that it gets to make money from both of them.

They're not betting on a different horse, they're betting on a different sport altogether. They're betting on a sport where you can get 10 to 1 odds on every player and only 3 people are playing. I don't know of any real sport like that, but with odds like that, I'm sure they feel pretty good about spreading their money around.

Don't forget that what they say is not what the mean, or even the truth, necessarily. They cannot say 'Oh yeah, the DS rules and screw all the other consoles' because they'll violate several agreements and people won't buy the already-existing and soon-to-exist games for those systems after they've said that. Sometimes when someone protests too violently, you should take the protest with more than a grain of salt. 'quick to point out' is a good indicator of this.

Wait.. what did we miss out on in the Gamecube days? I have 4 different Maddens for gamecube, as well as Sims2 that my ex forced me to purchase.. Need for speed: underground 2. Just about all their other sport games have been out for gamecube during its lifetime. Are there actually any games that didn't make it to Gamecube?

Actually, I would suspect that this announcement has more to do with Nintendo's strong showing at E3 2006 than with the current sales rates; it's been years since I was in the industry, but I suspect that many publishing executives saw the 6 hour line-up for the Wii and were shocked about the popularity (which resulted in a level of panic to find ways to support it). EA buying Headgate Studios in December means they were probably looking for months to find an adequate studio, and then spent months working o

Am looking forward to playing The Sims, Need for Speed, and Madden on Wii and DS because I simply couldn't get enough of them on PC , Playstation, and Xbox. Oh, and please tell me EA will release The Sims expansion #1-9 for the Wii, but not at the same time as Madden 2008 or Need for Speed: Even Faster 6, because I might not be able to afford them all...

Playing the Wii must be tough with that huge stick up your ass. Chill out, man. I was just making fun of the fact that EA has had the same three cash cows for years. I'm a PC gamer too, so I could care less about any console:P

I think you're missing the point. I know what it means, but its still wrong...completely. Just because its a commonly used phrase dose not mean the words are being used correctly. Yes, we know the intent of the use of "I could care less there," but again, its still utterly wrong.

Actually, Wii Sims looks to be a lot different then other versions of the Sims... From my very limited understanding, it looks like it is a combination of The Sims and Animal Crossing (trailer [youtube.com]) which could be either really good, or really awful.

It is currently a game I am watching both because I think it looks a little interesting, and because I know my Sister in Law and Niece would love it.

The company reported $1.281 billion in their revenue stream, fueled by the Sims, Madden, and Need for Speed franchises.

See the subject line. If it needs explanation, you'll probably never get it.

Why do so few Slashdotters appear to be interested in these genres? I rarely hear them talk about driving games and I never hear them talk about sports games. Despite this, both show up quite frequently in the top 10 [washingtonpost.com] of game sales charts. The Sims, which consistently dominates PC game sales, is talked about more often, but far less than Final Fantasy games, which don't show up in top-10 charts very often.

Someone is buying all these sports sports and driving titles. Doesn't it leave a pretty huge segment out of the discussion when Slashdotters talk about how this or that console will "win" because it plays this or that type when so many of the people playing some of the most popular games aren't represented? HDTV is very popular among sports fans relative to the general population, so doesn't it leave a gaping hole in the discussion of whether or not HDTV is necessary for game consoles when only geeks talk about it?

We are Geeks, but most people aren't. Lots and lots of non-geeks play video games. Presumably they're also buying lot and lots of game consoles. Why do we presume to know so much more about what console will "win" than they do? All we have to do is look at the sales charts to realize that they're as likely or more likely to decide which console lands on top in the new generation.

Not all Slashdotters are geeks, though you may see more of them here. There's a certain amount of crossover between Digg and Slashdot, though I'd expect a demographic difference. (I'd like to see some surveys regarding this, it'd be interesting).

But Slashdot has quite a few average joes like myself. Middle income, B.A education. Not employed in tech industries.

I'm lamenting the _very fact_ that gaming has gone mainstream. I frankly don't care to consider what the huddled masses are buying, because I don't believe those franchises are advancing games as a medium. OK, it's wonderful that lots of people out there enjoy their shiny new camera angle every year--what I (and most gamers who've been around for a while--an unfortunately shrinking proportion of "gamers") care about are things like "plot" and "innovation" and "fun." I

Well, think about it. If developers see that there's lots more money to be made in sequel-churning than in fronting risky but potentially innovating games, or redefine "risky game" to include anything that ISN'T a sure-fire bet, don't you think they're a lot more likely to put a lot more money and time behind things that aren't risky? Don't they have limited budgets? Doesn't that leech money and "talent" away from more risky projects? Games _are_ getting more expensive to develop, and it's going to be harde

I understand what you're saying, and I agree to a certain extent, but I must disagree with your assumption that the people who read and comment on Slashdot would not be reasonably accurate on what can (or will) happen in the videogame industry.Basically, every time you see a story posted about a Game Analyst predicting what will happen you will see hundreds of replys which either generally support the analysis or disagree with it. From what I have seen, if you read the well written comments which include re

So you turn up your nose at the popular "mainstream" franchise titles. Apparently Madden isn't intellectual enough.
I dislike when people just drip sarcastic, intellectual elitism all over the place because their own pet book/game/movie/etc. just isn't popular with the general public. God forbid someone like sports titles (Madden), or arcade racing (Need for Speed). And for Pete's sake... Sims (if not all the spin-offs) is the responsibility of geek hero Will Wright.
I like my share of esoteric softwar